The plural for life is lives.
The plural form for the compound noun still life is still lifes.Note: in this compound noun, the noun 'life' is treated as a regular plural.
Yes, lives is the plural for for the noun life.
Life is a singular noun. The plural form is lives.
There is no word in English spelled lifes.The plural form of the singular noun life is lives.The possessive form of the singular noun life is life's.
The plural form of the noun 'still life' is still lifes(or still-lifes).The plural form of changing the 'fe' to 'ves' does not apply to this compound noun.
There is no plural noun. The two nouns in the sentnece are life and family. The word family is a singular noun, the plural form is families. The word life is a singular noun, the plural form is lives. Actually, using either or both plurals (lives, families) would not change the meaning of the sentence.
Yes, the plural of the noun 'youth' is youths.The plural noun 'youths' is a word for two or more young people.The noun 'youth' as a word for a period in one's life is an uncountable noun.
The noun "life" in the noun phrase "millers' life" (the life of millers) is an abstract noun. The "life" of anyone or anything is a concept.The plural, possessive noun "millers'" is a concrete noun as a word for people.
The plural form is lives.Example sentence: Many lives were lost in the disaster.
The plural of life is lives.The plural possessive form of lives is lives'
The singular possessive form for the noun iris is iris's.Example: The iris's color brings the garden to life.
The singular noun is freedom; the plural noun is freedoms.The noun freedom is an uncountable noun as a word for a concept. The only exception is the plural form, 'freedoms' that refers to 'types of'; for example, the freedoms we enjoy are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.